Belgium’s new centre-right government took office yesterday, promising to raise the retirement age and slash costs by about €8 billion to balance the national budget by 2018 and cut the country’s debt.

Charles Michel, 38, the youngest Belgian prime minister since 1841, and his team of 13 ministers and four state secretaries swore an oath in front of King Philippe before proceeding to Parliament for their first Cabinet meeting.

Michel’s four-party coalition took office about five months after the parliamentary election in the linguistically divided country, which set a world record 18 months of political deadlock after the 2010 vote.

It is different from previous governments in a number of ways: it is the first to include the Flemish separatist N-VA party, the first to exclude the Socialists since 1988 and the first to include just one French-speaking party since 1958.

The coalition was formed after the separatist N-VA party softened its demands for greater autonomy for Dutch-speaking Flanders, an issue that has dominated Belgian politics in recent years and delayed the previous two government formations.

However N-VA has got its way in excluding the French-speaking Socialists, part of the federal government for the past 26 years and blamed by some in richer Dutch-speaking Flanders for draining cash to a welfare-dependent south.

The new government faces a sluggish economy

The new government faces a sluggish economy set to grow at little more than one per cent this year and a national debt among the highest in the euro zone at about 100 per cent of gross domestic product.

In a 147-page accord, it has said it will raise the State pension age to 67 from 65 and introduce measures to limit early retirement.

It will scrap a planned inflation-linked wage rise due next year, find savings in the public sector, including the health and social security budgets, and look into extending the life of some nuclear reactors. It also plans to ban wearing headscarves for civil servants dealing face-to-face with the public.

The long-term unemployed will have to do two half-days of community service per week, but there will be no German-style limit set on the time those without a job can draw full unemployment benefit, as the N-VA had wanted.

“It doesn’t go that far. It’s not what we saw in Germany,” said Peter Vanden Houte, chief economist at ING. “But there are steps to increase the incentive to work and to work longer. With pensions, they go further than any previous government.”

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